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Whether you are trying to recreate a family recipe from the old world, or you are planning an adventure for your tastebuds, Oak City Spice Blends can take your meal from ordinary to extraordinary. Is your recipe missing just that one flavor that you can’t find on the tip of your tongue? Let us help you to perfect your culinary creations to be better than you remember, and more than you could ever imagine.
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From the Spicekeeper’s Cottage - Coca-Cola Mustard-Crusted Holiday Ham
Inspired by a 1970s family recipe, finished with Wiggly Piggly Why This Ham Exists Some recipes don’t come from cookbooks—they come from kitchens that smelled like holidays. This ham is rooted in my mother’s 1970s recipe: yellow mustard, brown sugar, cloves, and Coca-Cola, baked low and slow until the outside turns glossy and the inside stays tender. This version keeps her method intact, with one small upgrade from the Spicekeeper’s Cottage: Wiggly Piggly, which brings warmth


THE HERITAGE TABLE ... When Instinct Meets Tradition: A Modern Turkey Brine With Medieval Roots
Featuring French Countryside Seasoning By Michel McNeese, Oak City Spice Blends There is a particular feeling that comes the week after Thanksgiving, when the casserole dishes are finally washed, the table linens folded, and grocery stores—almost mischievously—mark down whole turkeys to prices that make even the most seasoned cook pause. This year, that moment found me staring at a 19-pound bird priced at just 29 cents a pound. A steal. A sign. An invitation. And so, even tho


The Heritage Table: Northern Sun Powder & the Pepparkaka of Winter Light
Oak City Spice Blends — Heritage Table Series Introduction: A Cake for the Winter Sun In Scandinavia, winter is not simply a season; it is a geography of the spirit. Dawn stretches like a watercolor wash across the horizon, the sun appearing slowly—if at all—and kitchens become the brightest rooms in the house. The flavors that define this region are equally luminous: vanilla, orange, cocoa, cinnamon, ginger, cardamom. They were once costly imports arriving by trade routes, b


THE HERITAGE TABLE: PUFF PASTRY BAKLAVA WITH CHAI PIE WALLAH
Baklava has never belonged to one place. It is a dessert shaped by the hands of many cultures—Persian cooks perfuming nuts with rosewater, Greek bakers layering walnuts between sheets of dough as thin as parchment, Ottoman palace chefs stretching phyllo until it covered entire tabletops, and Armenian home kitchens filling their trays with warm spice and walnuts. Every region believed they made the best version, yet together they formed a culinary lineage that spans centuries.


The Heritage Table: Crisp Edges, Golden Hearts, A Deep and Long History of Fritters Across Time with 12 amazing recipes for you to try
By Oak City Spice Blends There are dishes that travel through centuries not because they are fancy, but because they are true. Honest. Practical. Comforting. They survive empires, borders, migrations, and the changes of taste and fashion because they meet a simple human desire: To transform ordinary ingredients into something extraordinary with a little heat and a little courage. For me, that first revelation happened in the most unexpected place — not in a culinary academy o


Sweet Potato & Carrot Casserole with Chai Pie Wallah
There is a long and comforting history behind root-vegetable casseroles. Long before canned marshmallows and Thanksgiving ovens, sweet carrots and tubers were simmered, mashed, and enriched with eggs, spices, and dairy across countless medieval kitchens. Recipes from the Eastern Mediterranean to Renaissance Europe often blended vegetable purees with warm spices and honey, creating dishes that walked the line between savory and sweet. This modern recipe follows in that traditi


The Heritage Table: A Thanksgiving Whole Chicken Strategy
Why Stuffing a Chicken (Not a Turkey) May Be the Smartest Holiday Choice This Year Featuring Oak City Spice Blends: French Countryside, Eastern Mediterranean, and Raleigh Rub Historical Context Long before turkey became the American holiday symbol, European and Middle Eastern kitchens celebrated feasts with smaller birds : chickens, capons, and partridges. In medieval households, a stuffed chicken was an everyday luxury—roasted over an open hearth, filled with herbs, bread, g


Steak & Two-Bean Chili with Peruvian Sun
Most chili recipes miss the step that actually builds flavor. This steak and two-bean chili starts by blooming spices in oil using Oak City Spice Blends Peruvian Sun, creating a richer, deeper pot from the very beginning.


The Heritage Table: A World of Meatballs
Featuring Oak City Spice Blends: La Spezia, Wilde Garlek, Umami Fire, and Bountiful Bahia A Young Chef at the Cary Market Last night at the Cary night market, a young boy stopped at my Oak City Spice Blends table. He couldn’t have been more than nine or ten, but he carried himself with that unmistakable spark — the quiet confidence of someone who already knows what he loves. His mother stood beside him, smiling with the kind of pride that needs no words. We started talking ab


Chicken & Rice Soup with Saxon Silk Dumplings
Featuring Oak City Spice Blends: Saxon Silk Description A deeply comforting, richly seasoned chicken and rice soup made extraordinary with tender, cloud-soft dumplings infused with Saxon Silk . This blend’s warm notes of cardamom, ginger, nutmeg, and herbs bring an old-world elegance to a classic Southern-style dish. Perfect for cold nights, healing meals, or anyone in need of a bowl of pure comfort. Ingredients For the Soup 1–1.5 lbs chicken thighs, chopped 4–5 large carrots


The Heritage Table: Pilaf, The World Traveler of Flavor . . .
Featuring Oak City Spice Blends: Persian Advieh, Eastern Mediterranean, and Bountiful Bahia Pilaf is one of the oldest and most influential rice dishes in the world, a quiet traveler that moved along caravan routes, sailed through imperial kitchens, and adapted itself to the tastes and customs of dozens of cultures. It is a dish shaped by empire, migration, and trade — a culinary manuscript written not on parchment but in grains of rice. Today, we know pilaf as rice that is l


Tokyo Market Curry Powder
A Clean, Historical Return to Japan’s Most Beloved Comfort Flavor Historical Context Few dishes in the modern Japanese kitchen carry as much cultural weight—or international misunderstanding—as Japanese curry. To many, the familiar brown stew is assumed to be a variant of Indian curry. The truth is far more intricate and entirely global. Japanese curry emerged not from Indian home cooking but from Victorian British curry powder, which itself was a stylized, industrial-era int
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